No wonder the original “resistance” movement has grown so big. So it seemed like a good time to highlight some books, both new and old, worth reading in these troubled times.

In a series titled “Resistance Reading,” Mother Jones talked to authors, activists, and others (including me) last year for book recommendations “that bring solace or understanding in this age of rancor.”

But before listing those, here are a few newer books:

Naomi Klein — No Is Not Enough: Resisting Trump’s Shock Politics and Winning the World We Need

“We’re in an age of protest,” says Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org and one of the world’s best writers on climate. Here’s the “Resistance Reading” he recommended to Mother Jones:

Rules for Revolutionaries, by Becky Bond and Zack Exley. They “spearheaded Bernie’s distributed organizing team” and “understand the tools that work right now for big change.”

This Is an Uprising, by Paul and Mark Engler. McKibben calls it “the best summary of all that the last 75 years has taught us about nonviolent organizing.” He adds: “It’s the book I wish I’d had a decade ago, because it would have saved a lot of trial-and-error experimentation as we got 350.org up and running.”

The Great Lie, a collection of essays by writers who lived under tyranny, such as Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Václav Havel, and Hannah Arendt, for those who want to understand “the parallels between our current flirtations with truthless fascism and those societies that were truly crushed by totalitarianism.”

Abraham Lincoln: His Speeches and Writings, edited by Roy Basler and Carl Sandburg, is a master class on what America needed to do to preserve liberty the last time we were so divided. Alongside classics like the Gettysburg Address are gems like “The Perpetuation of Our Political Institutions,” in which a 28-year-old Lincoln explains the danger to the Republic of a demagogue just like Trump.

A Collection of Essays, by George Orwell features the best work from the greatest essayist of the 20th century. Orwell is so relevant today, over six decades after his death, that he’s routinely ranked as Amazon’s №1 author in both “classics” and “contemporary” literature and fiction. Few essays offer better commentary on our alternative-facts president than 1946’s “Politics and the English Language,” in which Orwell explains why “in our time, political speech and writing are largely the defence of the indefensible.”

Brave New World Revisited, by Aldous Huxley is a 1956 collection of essays Huxley wrote about the dystopian future he had envisioned in this 1932 classic. Essays like “Propaganda in a democratic society” and “Subconscious persuasion” are as relevant today as Orwell’s essays. One must-read is Huxley’s 1949 letter to Orwell (author of 1984) about which of their dystopias would turn out to be more prescient.

Trump’s twin wars on climate and democracy are really inseparable at this point, and both can lead to dystopia.

So all those who resist Trump need to understand how people can fight back against his totalitarian instincts. The above recommendations are a good place to start.